Sobolskis made their residence. It had happened early in the afternoon. The boy had been at home for two days with a cold in his head, and on the third day, when Mrs. Sobolski told him he could go out, he went out running. But it seemed, according to City News, that the father hadn't (at three o'clock that afternoon) been informed of the loss of his only son. Sobolski was reported by the police to be missing from the tailor shop he worked in, City News saId. The proprietor said Sobolski had asked for an hour off to go out somewhere. What had he been doing when the truck struck that son of his? City News didn't say. I told Mr Barrett I thought there might be a "World We Live In" in this sad occurrence because of the father's mysterious absence from the tailor shop. "O.K., Mac," said Barrett busily, "see what you can do with it." "Taxi?" I asked, knowing the answer would be "No," and it was. A reporter could occasIonally wangle taxi expenses out of the W o rid if there was a hell of a big story-a four-alarm fire or a good murder-but on "w arId We Live In" pieces you walked, took a subway or a trolley car, or, if you were as rich as I thought I was, you simply took a taxi and paid for it your- self out of the fifty dollars a week. I put on my overcoat, with the green- covered .A merlcan Mercury in one of its pockets, put my soft gray felt hat on my head, and picked up my hard Malacca walking stick. Below the gold dome, I waved a taxi to the curb with the stIck and gave the driver the Riv- ington Street address. What the hell? I still had three dollars, and the neÀt day was payday. J OURNALISM, by its-very nature, is intrusive, and as a reporter I had, between the ages of seventeen and nineteen, become as intrusive as the next one. I knew that I could act as if I were a shy, sensitive, and sympa- thetic young man when I told whoever would answer my knock on the door of the Sobolski flat that I was a reporter from the W o rid, and, if necessary, flash my green police press card. It was a small girl who opened the door, and she was a cinch. In another moment, I was asking Mrs. Sobolski all kinds of questions having to do with what I probably called her great loss. The police and the undertaker and so on had already come and gone, and I knew that to Mrs. Sobolski I just seemed to be another kind of policeman who car- ried a stick instead of a club. She was thirty-eight years old. She was a good, 165 Two things everyone should take to Frankfurt, Cologne jDussel dor f, Hamburg, Munich, and Stuttgart. r -yr \" ....", ø" >.... wi< W", ;:i 1r <$ ::..-oi. ,w",. ...:. '.'i '.'W. :.;:" "\::: :....:- - ==:'.::. : : :" . . : ' . -OY . . .. . . ----- ..::..... 1. Lufthansa 2. Samsonite Silhouette Luggage . ^ .' ....;::. - , ' . ,. -- - : ::..:::::':" "Wi .............."""",... J' - . ..; ,{..... 0(.;.:-::::..- Å'> ". h ...........1. ( .r> l ..: '( ':\.. \ ø' ' , l Jj , f \ .) ..l- *. , 50. Ã ' .:::::. Most anything else you take is optional. But Lufthansa and Samsonite are essential for traveling in grand style. After all, Lufthansa is the jet-age airline. Famous for friendliness and on-time dependability throughout its \vorld-wide system. Silhouette is the jet-age luggage. Famous for helping travelers make their arrivals impressively uncluttered. Silhouette is slim. Trim. With lightweight magnesium frame and hidden locks. And it comes in a smart choice of colors and styles for men and women... from $25 Now you know why smart travelers always take both Lufthansa and Samsonite. And who's smarter than you. Samsonlte Corporation Denver, Colorado 80217. Also makers of Samsonite Furniture Lufthansa German Airlmes-Offlces m principal cities of U. S. A. and Canada.